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06:00
As per Wikipedia, a Linear Interpolation is:
"In mathematics, linear interpolation is a method of curve fitting using linear polynomials to construct new data points within the range of a discrete set of known data points"
Is a linear interpolation just the (statistical) average of a bunch of numbers?
 
2 hours later…
08:08
@Lapys Not exactly an average, but close. Given a endpoints of, say, (0,0) and (10, 10), you can user linear interpolation to get (1,1), (2,2) and so on.
bicubic master race checking in
So, a client wants me to basically write a front end for training with tensorflow, or rather integrate it into their software. I've trained a bunch of neural networks with python but I really can't judge how hard this is going to be. Target platform is Windows.
So, maybe do this? C++ execs() python?
Or maybe actually, use the C++ api to tensorflow?
 
1 hour later…
user7659542
09:39
It s been a while since I posted a question on SO
user7659542
I thought the whole community would jump on my question and give a zillion answers, yet almost nothing
user7659542
3
Q: Why odd operand error when compiling assembly?

traduceradLearning assembly and reading about the BIT instruction on msp430. When trying to compile this code: int main (void) { while(1){ __asm__("BIT R2, 3"); } return 0; } It says: error: odd operand: -3 Yet when writing __asm__("BIT.B R2, 3"); instead, it works. Could somebody explain this...

user1804599
11:26
You can use Boost.Python instead of exec. If you’re willing to share your address space with that filth.
11:49
@traducerad that's the current environment of SO. Unless you have more reputation, your question gets a bit if limelight, then.. nothing
Really you think this is a rep issue and not the fact that it's about msp430 assembly? How many people do you think are active on SO that work with that
12:03
^
nwp
nwp
@traducerad Where did you get the notion that you get requirements one by one? You get them in a batch and then it's on you to make them more specific. The requirement might only state "Save data in the database" and details like how to enter and store credentials, organize the database and dealing with the risk of the database being read or written by third parties is on you.
Tracking that the database credentials screen is part of the "Save data in the database" requirement makes sense and is sometimes required to get the software certified. I haven't had the problem that specifications are too granular, I had the problem that specifications didn't exist, so erring on the side of too many specifications seems right to me.
@nwp This is the part of agile process I see things break down in, the pre-backlog phase
nwp
nwp
12:23
I basically know nothing about agile processes.
Don't worry you're in the same boat as about 90% of people that allegedly do 'agile'
12:47
How easy is to call some python module in C?
@TelKitty not horridly hard, but you'll need to embed python
or call it externally as a script
Okay, I will look into that. It's between having to re-write some python code in C or calling python module in C. I guess I will choose the less work one.
user7659542
13:47
@nwp I mean that the granularity is too high because you create one webpage per requirement. You could create 1 webpage containig a table with all requirements for that one functionality
user7659542
@TelKitty stdlib has the system function which may allow you to do what you need
user7659542
system("python /usr/bin/myPythonScript");
user7659542
Smth like that maybe?
nwp
nwp
What do you mean by "You create one webpage per requirement"? You write the requirement in a text box and press "next". It's not much more effort than pressing enter, but it has the advantage of being able to check the requirements individually when they are done. Additionally you need to link tests to each requirement and verification and validation, so having all the requirements in a single ticket makes the ticket system pointless.
user7659542
How come some people argue an addition may take multiple clock cycles, knowing there is an ADD command?
nwp
nwp
13:50
I thought it takes 4 clock cycles on modern computers.
@traducerad you'd better hope you're not passing anything to that script... otherwise you end up in the lovely world of shell hacks
@nwp 1 cycle on most modern CPUs AFAIK
user7659542
@nwp hmm, mkay. I thought most asm instructions took 1 clock cycle
nwp
nwp
I thought it was 4, but there are 4 adders, so if you just keep adding on average it's 1 clock cycle due to interleaving the operations.
@nwp give me a sec to check Agner
@nwp 1 cycle with possibility for faster based on wider pipe
nwp
nwp
Huh, weird.
user7659542
13:54
@Mgetz just use a wrapper script which passes the argument to the script you initially wanted to call. That way you don't have to pass arguments via the system function :p
user7659542
So was I wrong? Do most asm instructions take more than 1 clock cycle?
nwp
nwp
@traducerad Dynamically generate said script in order to pass arguments. Brilliant.
user7659542
@nwp indeed, that's even better
nwp
nwp
I found this table. Just scrolling through it it looks about 50-50.
@traducerad depends on the architecture.
@traducerad or use APIs that allow you to pass the arguments as an array so you can't shell execute
user7659542
13:57
maybe risc is mostly 1 cycle, because it is reduced and thus simple?
user7659542
While cisc hides much more complexity and therefor takes longer?
nwp
nwp
points to starboard
@traducerad lol, no it's completely dependent on the microarchitecture
@nwp TBF I was looking at Zen1
user7659542
I find system architecture extremely interesting, but I don't know a lot about it
Pentium 4 was different
I was also only looking at r/r as that's the most comparable to RISC
R/M is de-facto three instructions effectively for RISC
Also most RISC architectures don't allow R/I instructions
14:46
Is there a way to make access to a variable follow "oop" stylings via getter and setter methods yet have the compiler optimize away the function call completely in the getter if the functions is just { return value; } ?
* member variable
15:06
@salbeira just do it as in inline in the definition and make it const noexcept?
insofar as you don't need to modify the object you're getting it from that should be fine
FWIW you're better off asking questions here: chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/116940/c-questions-and-answers
user7659542
So so, apparently a second corona wave might be coming
user7659542
time to prepare some money and throw it in the stock market
user7659542
can't wait for Tesla to reach 350-500€ again
nwp
nwp
Can't wait for Tesla to go bankrupt
user7659542
15:22
Not going bankrupt any time soon
user7659542
Some speculate they will join the S&P500
15:56
Stonks
 
2 hours later…
user1804599
17:54
Fun hash function: simulate a double pendulum.
19:39
Google Chrome DevTools inspecting Google Chrome DevTools
user7659542
20:16
Since when are system qualification tests a prerequisite to system integration tests?
user7659542
I always thought it was the other way around
21:03
Tried to request YouTube website with Mosaic... no luck :[
21:15
21:26
👍
21:36
I'm kinda sad that functions like std::round don't have templates to convert to the right destination types
 
1 hour later…
22:59
Looking for sbi...
Not sure if to be lucky or unlucky...
sbi, Berlin, Germany
196k 44 230 422
23:15
Just found him on twitter...

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